If someone creates a Java VM Oracle has no business in it. AFAIK Java is open technology. Google did not use any Oracle (Sun) software, they just tailored the open-source Harmony VM to their needs. How can Oracle ask for any compensation for a software they have nothing to do? This is patent trolling.

Just because they are suing for patent violation does not mean they are simply trolling. Google knew what was in the Java code base and Oracle, now the holders of those patents, are pressing Google for compensation. It's not as if Google was blind to this, Sun just never pursued.

Note that I am not picking sides here as I have no corporate/personal stake in either side.

Since when is the Dalvik VM based on the Harmony VM It uses the class libraries of the Harmony project (or at least a subset of them) but the VM itself is different. It isn't even a Java VM, i.e. i doesn't execute Java byte code. It's register based, not stack based like the usual Java VM and it converts all java byte code into its own format.

I have read that they "based" it on Harmony VM. Just how much of it is changes i don't know. Yes it is not stack based, but nevertheless its a VM which executes programs written in Java (after compiling and translating the byte code).

Just because they are suing for patent violation does not mean they are simply trolling. Google knew what was in the Java code base and Oracle, now the holders of those patents, are pressing Google for compensation. It's not as if Google was blind to this, Sun just never pursued.

Note that I am not picking sides here as I have no corporate/personal stake in either side.

Since when is the Dalvik VM based on the Harmony VM It uses the class libraries of the Harmony project (or at least a subset of them) but the VM itself is different. It isn't even a Java VM, i.e. i doesn't execute Java byte code. It's register based, not stack based like the usual Java VM and it converts all java byte code into its own format.

Likely to be that they are going to kill OpenJDK, guess its time to start preparing a fork. Too bad they never did release the source for Java Web Start and Java Applets for OpenJDK.

OpenJDK is not yet dead and please don't fork Java is already fragmented on mobiles, I don't want to get the same on desktop computers.

I hate software patents. Dalvik VM is very slow. I would like Oracle and Google to work together on something like "J2SE for Mobiles" in order to replace both DVM and J2ME by something really cross-platform, fast and reliable.

OpenJDK is not yet dead and please don't fork Java is already fragmented on mobiles, I don't want to get the same on desktop computers.

I hate software patents. Dalvik VM is very slow. I would like Oracle and Google to work together on something like "J2SE for Mobiles" in order to replace both DVM and J2ME by something really cross-platform, fast and reliable.

Well that OpenSolaris post linked to above does mention that the open source development model has been axed, might just refer to Solaris but you never know. As for a fork Redhat already has one called IcedTea, so would just be a matter of jumping to it.

OpenJDK is not yet dead and please don't fork Java is already fragmented on mobiles, I don't want to get the same on desktop computers.

I hate software patents. Dalvik VM is very slow. I would like Oracle and Google to work together on something like "J2SE for Mobiles" in order to replace both DVM and J2ME by something really cross-platform, fast and reliable.

Out of curiosity, has this move by Oracle scared anyone away from using Java for their games anymore?

It would be braindead to do so, at this moment. Then again, how many people actually use Java for their commercial games? Very few. Anything Oracle does that screws up clientside tech, will have negligible impact. If you control the env. on the *desktop* (companies, or embedded JRE) then just keep using 6u21 for eternity.

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I have serious regrets betting on applets, but right now it's the only way to get "full-access" to hardware in a web-browser. I think it's an excellent technology for distributing games on the web. Too bad it stagnated under Sun's leadership, and probably even worse under Oracle's.

I don't know if it's an omen, but I just recently ordered "The D programming language". Not exactly an alternative though and I love my Scala.

Offtopic:You might read up on Go too. From the YouTube videos on it it seems pretty thought through.

Go is interesting, but horribly crippled right now. For instance there isn't even a proper windows build yet, so it only really works on Linux (and Mac is completely unsupported). This isn't really surprising given that google's focus for it is high-performance server software.

D is equally interesting, but has never reached mainstream appeal and so the whole toolchain is still pretty weak, despite it being quite an old language. Libraries are hard to come by as well.

IMHO your best alternative for a high-level, cross-platform setup is a modern scripting language (like python or ruby) on top of a small C or C++ core.

I think I'll second what Orangy says... I think Python is my next stop after Java (with something like Panda3D on the backend).

Uggh, compared to Java python is just an exercise in a different kind of pain. It feels designed for easy scripting but the lack of static typing makes it so hard to easily build a large project. Sure there are ways around it, but to me Java has so many good things going for it that unless Oracle makes the language a living hell, I'll tolerate a little political money-grubbing bullshit.

Solaris Express 11 will take its place: it will (still) be free, but not open source. I wonder what the next phase in this transition is.

In that leaked memo:

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Solaris is used by about 40% of Oracle’s enterprisecustomers, which means we have a 60% growth opportunity in our topcustomers alone.

Perhaps i'm just being picky, but that statement is just wrong.... it's a 150% growth potencial within the existing customer base.Or do upper management measure percentages & growth differently to normal people?

Offtopic:You might read up on Go too. From the YouTube videos on it it seems pretty thought through.

I'm following the happenings around Go, i do like some of its concepts, but don't like others, its a bit "dirty" language like C is, not as strict and clean like Java. And i'm starting to dislike Scala more and more. Its not just a better Java, but a syntactically oversize Java. D is still the best Java/C++ mix, but a bit quiet lately.

Google CEO Eric Schmidt was the Java product manager at Sun in the 90's so surely they were aware of these issues. The patent suit was a surprise to me, I expected Oracle to sue Google for the same reason Sun sued MS: not distributing complete, compliant version of Java and/or extending it.

I also wasn't aware that Google was licensing Android to all these phone manufacturers. If that's the case, and Google is making money on Sun/Java IP via Andoid/Dalvik, I see no real reason why Oracle shouldn't be paid for the Java IP. Now, are the patents valid? I tend to not think so. It would be great for one of these patent cases go all the way to the supreme court, and not settled in arbitration so no one knows what happened. It would be great to get some of these crap patents thrown out.

Go is interesting, D is interesting (there's a port of SWT to D), but I think right now, Qt is the only complete platform of libraries comparable to Java/.NET, so either Qt/C++ or PyQt are the best way forward.

Out of curiosity, has this move by Oracle scared anyone away from using Java for their games anymore?

Not games, but I professionally do work with Java based systems (JBoss et al) and this is just another stone in the hands of people already looking to go Taliban on Java.

If it is Oracle's goal to totally scare away everyone from Java, they are doing a really nice job.Seriously, what are they thinking? Does no one at Oracle have a flipping idea what is going on or is Oracle only made up of clueless suits?

Here is a clue Oracle:The people reading such news are the same people who use Java.The devs. Not the suits. Not the managers.And if they see Oracle trying to pull a M$, what do you think they will think?

Speaking of M$. Does this also lay the typical pro-C# arguments, about how M$ is cool because it has opened up C# and whatnot, to rest?

Java is a wonderful language, and when Sun was in charge there were some people working on trying to keep it viable for gaming (chrism). Sure, sun was slow and strange, but at least there was some kind of effort. I spoke with Sun directly several times about the games I made, and that made me feel like the platform I was trusting my game in would last for many years.

Oracle hasn't contacted me once, despite Minecraft being something of a killer app at this point, and they seem to have no reason at all to keep client side java alive, as there really honestly is no money in it for them. Adding to this that Larry Ellison is BFF with Steve Jobs who recently took a huge plunge into the greedy-go-nuts pool and tries to kill Flash (which does what client-side java does, more or less), and I think the future is mighty bleak.

Sure, it might be kinda possible to fork Java (not so certain because of the patents..), but a forked java would be a much, MUCH smaller platform as almost nobody would have it installed.

I wouldn't throw java overboard so quickly because of some lawsuit. I'd say such patent lawsuits are business as usual.Yes, I'm also concerned, and I'm no fan of Larry Ellison and Steve Jobs either, but them rubbing eachothers backs won't keep me from doing what I'm doing now. For me, java is still the best technology for what I want to achieve.The only reason for me to jump ship to other technology would be because I found something better, not because I let some political bullshit rule my decisions.

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Does this also lay the typical pro-C# arguments, about how M$ is cool because it has opened up C# and whatnot, to rest?

I was surprised about the number of .NET zealots that wasted no time into pointing out how superior C# is and how Android should go away from java and go for C# instead.

Time has changed. Oracle has contacted me 3 times (whereas I have created no killer application), a French manager even gave me his phone number. I won't leave the boat now and I don't understand pessimistic things said here. What's wrong? Java works, it could be better but it still works. What has become the Java Store?

I won't leave the boat now and I don't understand pessimistic things said here. What's wrong? Java works, it could be better but it still works. What has become the Java Store?

For someone like myself and my company (and others) who has invested a lot of time and thus money into Java, you have to take these risks seriously.After these steps, who knows what Oracle will pull next. And their friendship with Apple is NOT a good thing imho. Might as well have married M$.

I just want to know if the platform I am working on has a future or not.The thing that made Java so great was, besides the cool features, that it was openly available for every platform.

Though to be honest I wonder what could possibly replace Java on the (JEE) server side. Java has been brilliant for this use case.Maybe Google will come up with a replacement (BINJ : BINJ is not Java )

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